More On Healing: We will not be healed if we hold hate in our hearts

Last month, the 10th anniversary of the September 11 attacks was observed in many places. A familiar face was at one church service in New York:

St Nicholas Welcomes Bishop Katharine

Presiding Bishop Preaching at St Nicholas, Feb 2007 (photo credit David Gibbs)

[Episcopal News Service] Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori asked the congregation gathered Sept. 11 at St. Paul’s Chapel in lower Manhattan, across the street from Ground Zero, to pray for those who perpetrated the violence, those who sought vengeance and for the families and friends of those who died in the terrorist attacks 10 years earlier.

“We will not be healed if we hold hate in our hearts,” Jefferts Schori told media following the service. “Healing comes through the discovery of common bonds.”

About 200 people gathered Sept. 11 at St. Paul’s Chapel for “A Mass for Peace,” kicking off Trinity Wall Street’s daylong observance themed “Remember to Love.”

Via The Lead

Healing Prayer: A ministry from the past, for the present, into the future

Icon of St Luke

In this week’s News from Nick, outreach coordinator Jan Tossman posted about her experience with healing prayer at last Saturday’s service.

I want to personally thank Fran and Tony Begonja for ministering healing prayers (in honor of Luke, the Physician) to those of us who desired/needed it this weekend. I felt love and compassion generating from the two of them, as they gently touched and prayed over me. Coupled with Hal’s beautiful music in the background, I was literally overwhelmed with emotion, and felt a stronger connection with God than I have in awhile. It was not only a moving moment for me, but a beautiful and heart-felt addition to our service. On behalf of the congregation, I just want to say, Thank You, Fran and Tony, for your very special prayers and significant presence at St. Nick’s.

-Jan Tossman

Once, years ago, I also experienced the power of healing touch in a couple of ways during a family crisis; one was during a small Eucharist (communion) service for medical staff and visitors at an Episcopal hospital in the Intermountain West. The other was a distinctly secular, yet meditative “hot lava stone” massage during the same period of time. Both really helped me get my head on straight and gave me a renewed sense of spiritual well-being.

More recently, Father Manny has offered healing prayer and annointing, sometimes at the drop of a hat after services. Just ask!

Several years ago, several of us would accompany Father Paul Broullet during monthly visits to Asbury Court, a senior community that was the home of a much-loved member, Carmen McCall. Every other month, it was an Anointing for Healing rather than a Eucharist… and it seemed to us that not only were we offering spiritual food and healing, we were being fed and healed. When Father Paul’s health declined, we weren’t able to continue the ministry… but perhaps we should think about starting it again if there’s interest and energy there.

In one of those happy coincidences, the Episcopal News Service published a very nice piece about healing prayer, and how effective it can be in getting the Gospel message through to people (and how it can be a catalyst for growth):

[Episcopal News Service] Although Jesus commanded his followers to go out and preach the kingdom and heal the sick (Luke 9:2), the Rev. Nigel Mumford wonders if the Episcopal Church has only gotten it half-right.

“The church has done a great job preaching the kingdom, but not a very good job of healing the sick. That’s 50 percent of what the Lord told us to do,” said Mumford, 57, director of healing ministries at Christ the King Spiritual Life Center in Greenwich, New York. “Why is it that we’re not doing it?”

Healing prayer is such a strong evangelistic tool, he said. “If we would just do it, the church would grow. We would breathe new life into it, literally.”

All it takes is six simple heartfelt words, according to Mumford, that can be offered by everyone, anywhere, wherever and whenever, and as often as possible: “How may I pray for you?”

Which is not to be confused with “televangelists, who have given healing ministry a bad name,” he added.

“Smacking someone on the head and saying they’re healed in the name of Jesus frightens most Episcopalians, to say the least,” he said in a recent telephone interview. “It’s not at all what we do anyway. What we do is very quiet and gentle.”

And now finally, in yet another suspiciously timed coincidence, here is a link to some healing prayer resources… on the webpage of a different St Nicholas Episcopal Church, this one in the in the Diocese of Washington.

New Stewardship For The New Millennium: 2012 Pledge Drive

Yes, it’s that season at St Nicholas: not Advent, not Lent, but Fall Pledge Drive, not unlike your local public radio station. You’ll see information in the Saturday/Sunday bulletins, and there will be more information coming soon.

Sharp-eyed members and friends may have noticed this item in the e-newsletter, News from Nick:

Reminder: We hope you are considering your pledge to St. Nicholas for 2012. As we wrote earlier, our hope is for every household at St. Nicholas to submit a pledge form for 2012 by November 20 so that we may plan for next year’s budget.

Pledge forms are at this link and on the shelf just outside the worship space.

We are most grateful for the many ways all the members of the Community of St. Nicholas support our mission and ministries.

Of course, we are always seeking your gift of time and talent as well. Please take a look at the Getting Involved column at left and see if there is a ministry you feel called to share in.

More information may be found at this link.

What’s at those links? Well, only our first effort at electronic pledge gathering, and a pep talk about what’s really important: having the resources to build financial independence from the Diocese (that is, to go from toddling to walking with Christ), and to help “those in need beyond our doors.”

We ask you to read and reflect upon the Feasting on Gratitude articles. They are a rich reminder of what God does for us, and the meaning He brings to the lives of all His people. They spur us to reflect upon our own lives and the many ways we are blessed.

We ask you to think about how Saint Nicholas helps you to connect to God and to appreciate all His gifts. Saint Nicholas needs your financial support so that this wonderful place where we come together as a community of faith can be here for all of us. Our vibrant, caring community supports and nurtures each and every one of us in our times of need and our times of celebration. We warmly welcome each newcomer. And we reach out to those in need beyond our doors.

Of interest to those on the Stewardship Committee who’ve been praying, working, and sweating over the initiative: a brand new website from the Episcopal Church that’s a great resource for this important, ministry-supporting effort.

You’ve just been appointed stewardship chair for your congregation. You’re ready to roll up your sleeves and get to work – but where in the world do you start?

That’s the question TENS has always tried to answer for stewardship leaders throughout The Episcopal Church. And now, networking with those leaders has just gotten easier, because TENS has become an online network for the 21st century. We are delighted to launch our new website, www.tens.org, full of stewardship resources you can put to work in your congregation, diocese or ministry right away.

via TENS: Welcome to the New TENS Web Experience